Randy Field
Randy Field is a director, which means he gets people to do and say things they never thought they would or could. Some of them are actors, including stars like Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jason Leigh, but many of them have been “real people” who thought they’d rather die than be in front of a camera until they met Randy. He has worked all over the world in corporate media and documentaries. His film, “Crime of the Big Leagues” was recently added to the permanent collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. With Jane Hall, he is the co-founder of Tomorrow Media. Clients include Apple, AT&T, Chrysler, Cisco, Disney, GM, Google IBM, Intel, Levi Strauss, Mercedes Benz, Microsoft, Motorola, NBC, NEC, Proctor and Gamble, Seagate, Sega, Sony, and Visa. Randy’s idol is Mel Brooks.
charlie pearson
Charlie Pearson is a scriptwriter, which means he’s the one who has to figure out what yadda yadda yadda actually means. He began his career in corporate media, working primarily for tech companies ranging from Apple Computer to Zenith Corporation, although he once scripted a musical for Mack Trucks. His television documentary work has been seen on PBS as well as ABC, HBO, Showtime, A&E, Discovery, National Geographic and throughout Europe. PBS credits include “Keeping Score,” featuring Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony, “The Promise of Play,” and “The Digital Divide.” He was writer/associate producer of the Academy Award nominated short film “Good Night Miss Ann.” He is the principle author of “The Last Expedition: Stanley’s Mad Journey through the Congo” (W.W. Norton). Charlie also makes excellent chili, but not for lunch. Jane does lunch.
Jane Hall
Jane Hall is a producer, which means she is both a fanatic about details and the person who has to keep her eye on the big picture at all times. She began her career in public radio where one of her interests was personal histories and family archives. She then produced a variety of projects for Apple Computer, became a senior producer at the Kenwood Group in San Francisco and, for the last 20 years, has been a principal at Tomorrow Media, where she has supervised projects all over the world for an array of Fortune 500 companies. She is especially adept at client interface and has a reputation for keeping her head when everyone else isn’t. Jane also arranges the best lunches in the business. Clients include Apple, Cisco, GE, HP, NEC, Philips and Quest Diagnostics.
katherine ellison
Katherine Ellison is a Pulitzer-prize winning foreign correspondent who used to roam all over Asia and Latin America but for the past 20 years (yes, after kids) has been writing books, magazine articles, and ghost-written content of all kinds. Her books include “The Mommy Brain: How Motherhood Makes You Smarter,” and “Buzz: A Year of Paying Attention.” She has also joined forces with folk including Harvard education expert Todd Rose, Oakland headmaster Tom Little, and even Microsoft’s Bill Gates to help tell their stories. She hardly ever cooks, but would be happy to join Jane for lunch.